Sussex Street in Toxteth Park

Can anyone tell me anything about Sussex Street ? My great great grandfather was the publican at the Grapes Inn, 22 - 24 Sussex Street according to the 1871 census.

I've checked some old maps and I think Sussex Street is now the North - South part of Sussex Gardens just along from Luke Street.

Does anyone have any pictures or information about the area before it was redeveloped ? The maps I have seen seem to show nearby streets as back to back terraces but Sussex Street itself looks to have had bigger buildings.

Can anyone tell me anything about Sussex Street ? My great great grandfather was the publican at the Grapes Inn, 22 - 24 Sussex Street according to the 1871 census.

I've checked some old maps and I think Sussex Street is now the North - South part of Sussex Gardens just along from Luke Street.

Does anyone have any pictures or information about the area before it was redeveloped ? The maps I have seen seem to show nearby streets as back to back terraces but Sussex Street itself looks to have had bigger buildings.

Thanks

Sussex St went from Upper Warwick St to Upper Hill St. It continued from Dickens St, which still exists.

Probably had 3 to 4 high multi-family houses. Sussex Gdns was built on it.

Deprived of its unique dockland waters Liverpool
becomes a Venice without canals, just another city, no
longer of special interest to anyone, least of all the
tourist. Would we visit a modernised Venice of filled in
canals to view its modern museum describing
how it once was?

The 1930s. There was a cooperage on the corner of Upper Warwick St. Sussex St was there in 1838, however the buildings demolished in the 1930s would have been poor quality buildings built after 1838. The Victorians built some real cheap slummy rubbish.

Deprived of its unique dockland waters Liverpool
becomes a Venice without canals, just another city, no
longer of special interest to anyone, least of all the
tourist. Would we visit a modernised Venice of filled in
canals to view its modern museum describing
how it once was?

As corpy tenements went, Sussex Gardens were late arrivals, after WWII (not inter-war like many of them)

The fact they had windows in the stairwells bears this out too. Just after they were built, the corpy turned to the 3 high unit style still seen a lot around liverpool as lifts were then put in the larger tenements with a span of more than 6 flats per landing.

It's likely that the Victorian Sussex Street may have survived until the 1950s in parts. The Liverpool records office may have some photographs taken by the city engineers dept. Next time i'm in there i'll take a look.

As corpy tenements went, Sussex Gardens were late arrivals, after WWII (not inter-war like many of them)

I did think about that as they were a nicer design, with no long landings. I couldn't find the date. They must have been just post-war - probably an improved pre-war design put on hold - the tenements did evolve. The doors and fitments were clearly the same as pre-war tenements, whereas the post-war three high flats were clearly more modern designs of fitments.

Sussex Gdns must have been about the last of the German/Austrian inspired tenement housing in Liverpool.

Deprived of its unique dockland waters Liverpool
becomes a Venice without canals, just another city, no
longer of special interest to anyone, least of all the
tourist. Would we visit a modernised Venice of filled in
canals to view its modern museum describing
how it once was?